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Sep 10, 2016
09/16
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they were new englanders that came to new york city. founder and editor of the tribune, one of the two most widely read papers and henry at plymouth church. it was church that asked lincoln to speak in 1860. he's not even the dark horse. he's the darkest possible dark horse of candidate. he hasn't announced candidacy yet. the new york newspapers couldn't figure out his name, abram link own. several went with a. lincoln. because of that they got cold feet and didn't they he was able to attract a crowd so they brought him over to manhattan instead of brooklyn and sweeps the venue to cooper union in manhattan. and the speech he made there in february 1860 arguably the most important of his career because it made his career. at the same time he got his picture taken, the famous photo of him standing in his wrinkle coat because he had gotten off the trade leaning on some books. a. lincoln. pretty soon he announces candidacy and he gets elected president. it's been said -- without that speech and without that photograph, it's highly unlikely
they were new englanders that came to new york city. founder and editor of the tribune, one of the two most widely read papers and henry at plymouth church. it was church that asked lincoln to speak in 1860. he's not even the dark horse. he's the darkest possible dark horse of candidate. he hasn't announced candidacy yet. the new york newspapers couldn't figure out his name, abram link own. several went with a. lincoln. because of that they got cold feet and didn't they he was able to attract a...
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Aug 17, 2021
08/21
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no one seemed happy with new york city, new york city was slow to ratify the constitution. in this way hamilton and jay and madison wrote the federalist papers even though the new york city ratify it. washington was worried will he go to new york city for my inaugural. in ratify this estate and can even be the president if we don't have a city. and nobody seemed like new york city unlike today where everybody likes near city. thomas jefferson claims the new york city may never have as far as i can learn, ten months of winter. only two of summer and agree right now, some of the snow and instead of new york city, belongs for the company springfield. he describes new york city is overrun by dogs and garbage in a much else. so no one like new york city, this can only months in new york city and there was a deal cut. next slide. >> due will be cut new york city on june 20th, 7090, and what is probably the second most biggest dinner party in history, behind the last last supper. in the dinner party was between you can see the picture, jefferson, anderson hamilton and madison and
no one seemed happy with new york city, new york city was slow to ratify the constitution. in this way hamilton and jay and madison wrote the federalist papers even though the new york city ratify it. washington was worried will he go to new york city for my inaugural. in ratify this estate and can even be the president if we don't have a city. and nobody seemed like new york city unlike today where everybody likes near city. thomas jefferson claims the new york city may never have as far as i...
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Sep 12, 2016
09/16
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for "the new york times" he hosted the weekend explorer video podcasts on the new york city history and he has also written for the "washington post" and npr, pbs and his books include reflections on the birth of office, faith, rock till you drop and black like you which is the book and of course the village a former resident of greenwich village on the lower east side in hells kitchen he now lives in brooklyn heights. please welcome john strausbaugh. [applause] >> thank you. can you hear me? i used to do theater so i'm good at that, can you hear me!. i want to thank politics and prose for having me. and thanks to booktv for being here as well. it's an entirely appropriate i think to come to washington and talk about new york city in the civil war because the two cities have a very high level of interaction of course, and an affect on each other. while washington was the nation's capital, new york city was the capital of just about every other thing that mattered. it had a huge impact in creating the conditions for the war and also the con duct of the war. but it was a hugely confused i
for "the new york times" he hosted the weekend explorer video podcasts on the new york city history and he has also written for the "washington post" and npr, pbs and his books include reflections on the birth of office, faith, rock till you drop and black like you which is the book and of course the village a former resident of greenwich village on the lower east side in hells kitchen he now lives in brooklyn heights. please welcome john strausbaugh. [applause] >>...
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Oct 1, 2016
10/16
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is. >> were the slaves in new york city? no slavery ended in new york city over gradual period but it ended in 1827. however, southerners could legally bring their slaves with. the when they came to visit so there were slaves in the city put not local slaves. there will 12,000 blacks and were free blacks. beyond their being free they're situation was not measurably better than in the south. >> was it legal to buy and sell slaves. >> no, not after 1827. it was could freeing she slaves. they started that in 1798 and let got until 1827, partly to give the owners and the slave owners in new york enough time to find buyers in the south for their slaves. actually i should say that's my interpretation of it. i'm not sure that's true. actually, i'm sure that's true. sure. okay. i'm. >> i'm trying to imagine the geography of the factions in the city at the time. were abolitionists and republicans sort of occupying identifiable neighborhoods or kind of mixed. >> a very good question and, yes, they were. abolitionism tended to by a new
is. >> were the slaves in new york city? no slavery ended in new york city over gradual period but it ended in 1827. however, southerners could legally bring their slaves with. the when they came to visit so there were slaves in the city put not local slaves. there will 12,000 blacks and were free blacks. beyond their being free they're situation was not measurably better than in the south. >> was it legal to buy and sell slaves. >> no, not after 1827. it was could freeing she...
502
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Sep 4, 2012
09/12
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new york city, that is now liberty state park. there is a little plaque embedded in the grass but if you look with a magnifying glass you might go to find. i'm being sarcastic here you can find it, i'm glad it's there. you don't have a sense of the magnitude of this place, this compound, this depot on the jersey started the harbor where trains from across the midwest or and the northeast are pouring into jersey city, unloading guns, ammunition, food, uniforms, mules, horses, all of which are loaded onto cargo ships, american and neutral nla cargo ships and sent to france to fight in the war, to help the allies continue fighting. in 1916, the german government unless a small number of saboteurs to get into this place at night and managed to detonate some explosive and the whole thing goes sky high. throughout the whole harbor area, about five people are killed, only five. the window class is shattering all over manhattan. jersey city hoboken. it's a big mess, cost a lot of money. what is interesting that the time, although the u.s.
new york city, that is now liberty state park. there is a little plaque embedded in the grass but if you look with a magnifying glass you might go to find. i'm being sarcastic here you can find it, i'm glad it's there. you don't have a sense of the magnitude of this place, this compound, this depot on the jersey started the harbor where trains from across the midwest or and the northeast are pouring into jersey city, unloading guns, ammunition, food, uniforms, mules, horses, all of which are...
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Oct 5, 2023
10/23
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york city and new york state. our southern border has been wide-open for years. since joe biden took office nearly 6 million migrants have crossed the border. many illegal. the asylum cases are taking two to three years to be heard. at minimum. when these cases are finally heard, nearly two-thirds are being rejected. and yet new york city's response is to enact sanctuary city policies, refused to cooperate with i.c.e., right to shelter policies, and using taxpayer funds to provide free housing, free healthcare, free education, free food, free free clothing and then be shocked, shocked that people would want to come to new york. now, my family came through ellis island over 100 years ago. new york is a beacon. and i believe in immigration. my wife is an immigrant. she came to this country in search of a better life and economic opportunity, and education. i'm proud of the fact she became a united states citizen to in half years ago. we have a 17 month old daughter who will have a better life because her mother chos
york city and new york state. our southern border has been wide-open for years. since joe biden took office nearly 6 million migrants have crossed the border. many illegal. the asylum cases are taking two to three years to be heard. at minimum. when these cases are finally heard, nearly two-thirds are being rejected. and yet new york city's response is to enact sanctuary city policies, refused to cooperate with i.c.e., right to shelter policies, and using taxpayer funds to provide free housing,...
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Feb 15, 2015
02/15
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built in new york city. he would pass the bridge and bow his head every time he passed it. and while all the construction is going on it's like it reminded me of building a medieval cathedral, which were urban spectacles which people came to see in new york when you're throwing up the frame of a skyscraper where the birds don't fly. this apt-like looking men are working on the steel frames, and people would come -- urban theater. people would come with binoculars to watch them. sky boys they called them. and a lot of the sky boys were mohawk indians who came from a reservation of the st. lawrence river on the other side of the canadian border, and they commuted and lived in brooklyn. they came here on the subway, and they threw up those things. and a lot of people in the paper are claiming the mohawks are genetically coded to handle height. that's just racist. it's a dangerous occupation but it's a learned experience, and there's -- don't forget, see the pictures. a lot of times when i do my talks in new yor
built in new york city. he would pass the bridge and bow his head every time he passed it. and while all the construction is going on it's like it reminded me of building a medieval cathedral, which were urban spectacles which people came to see in new york when you're throwing up the frame of a skyscraper where the birds don't fly. this apt-like looking men are working on the steel frames, and people would come -- urban theater. people would come with binoculars to watch them. sky boys they...
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9.0
Aug 14, 2021
08/21
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in the case of new york city, 456 stations in new york city at any givenn time for the 5000 train cars, three of 4000 buses and this expense was probably my most satisfying transit in new york was separate from the city police at 25000 in housing police with 4000 but they were a dumping ground in a sense of old police. pretty work? work in transit. it was just not well thought of. make them in their reincorporate to a half years that department accredited, a great team with me at the union i talked about having fist with unions, and week received national accreditation in california, the union paid 60% team to go to california for the awards ceremony. can you imagine that? they felt so proud of the idea that they have becomee accreditd and they are getting this new york is the marine part of new york city police department. i had so much fun in transit but also it allowed me with the state department across the river because of this soog in nw york in the city and had about the rest of it is and had is what you make it. with some people unfortunately big-ticket anchor to the criminal s
in the case of new york city, 456 stations in new york city at any givenn time for the 5000 train cars, three of 4000 buses and this expense was probably my most satisfying transit in new york was separate from the city police at 25000 in housing police with 4000 but they were a dumping ground in a sense of old police. pretty work? work in transit. it was just not well thought of. make them in their reincorporate to a half years that department accredited, a great team with me at the union i...
5
5.0
Mar 13, 2021
03/21
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washington is a not graded in new york city in late april of 1789 through new york city at federal hall and you see a picture of it here on the right this home on cherry street his residence and new york city would be the antrum capitol. no one seemed happy with new york city. nerc said he was slow to ratify the constitution. this is why hamilton jay in medicine rep -- wrote the federalist papers that washington was worried will i go to new york city for minot grow? the it's not even ratified as a state that without undermine everything? the they can be the president of the don of the city and nobody liked new york city unlike today where everybody liked near city. thomas jefferson claimed new york city said spring and fall they have never had as far as i can learn. in 10 months of winter and only two of summer and i'm taping this with the snow and the cold. he longed for the company of springfield. he described new york city is overrun by hogs dogs and garbage and not much else. no one likes new york city. they spend the limits in your city and then there was a deal cut. next slide. th
washington is a not graded in new york city in late april of 1789 through new york city at federal hall and you see a picture of it here on the right this home on cherry street his residence and new york city would be the antrum capitol. no one seemed happy with new york city. nerc said he was slow to ratify the constitution. this is why hamilton jay in medicine rep -- wrote the federalist papers that washington was worried will i go to new york city for minot grow? the it's not even ratified...
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0.0
Feb 19, 2023
02/23
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new york city. but very quickly the electrical grid was extended to middle class neighborhoods in new york city so that by turn of the century, if you were living in a middle class section of new york city or middle class section of chicago or i don't know, evanston, you had electric lights. that's a fundamental transformation of the way your life works, changes, all sorts of things. just to have electricity, which is a long winded way of saying that a good swath of american society, the richest americans and a growing middle class, the industrial system wasn't, a burden at all. it was this very excite thing that was bringing a call of life to and your family that was unprecedented. and the industrial system needed those. it needed them as working people in their offices. it needed them as consumers consumers. but and you knew this was coming, but what they needed more. were people to work in the mines to work in the mills to work in the factories, to run the machines that made the industrial system
new york city. but very quickly the electrical grid was extended to middle class neighborhoods in new york city so that by turn of the century, if you were living in a middle class section of new york city or middle class section of chicago or i don't know, evanston, you had electric lights. that's a fundamental transformation of the way your life works, changes, all sorts of things. just to have electricity, which is a long winded way of saying that a good swath of american society, the...
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0.0
Oct 6, 2023
10/23
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york city, new york city is not going to be destroyed. my grandparents were immigrants and i have stated new york city, totally fun. >> thank you, sir. my question would be for the national park service and department way we weren't invited to the table planning the law-enforcement, any of the law-enforcement aspect that went to the mall 61 pages is at least one time, they say we are going to be the sole responsible the law enforcement action on our my question is why parkways are. >> have you seen at 2200 camp that works very well and never seen it. we have never seen anything like that. the playgrounds and there is no way that could work and that's why i came back to the first good process, policy and one last thing, going to the front of the line coming people have been forced lungs and use going to the like little think it helps anybody. i will. >> is ranking member, you are recognized. >> let me the every city in america has become a border. rampant public on the subject of the seven revision you mentioned in your testimony about the
york city, new york city is not going to be destroyed. my grandparents were immigrants and i have stated new york city, totally fun. >> thank you, sir. my question would be for the national park service and department way we weren't invited to the table planning the law-enforcement, any of the law-enforcement aspect that went to the mall 61 pages is at least one time, they say we are going to be the sole responsible the law enforcement action on our my question is why parkways are....
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Oct 15, 2016
10/16
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new york city was huge. and at this point, we're talking about just manhattan and not even just manhattan, just the southern half of manhattan. from 42nd street up was pretty lonesome. in that space you had, in 1860, around 800,000 people. that was 200,000 more than the nearest big city of philadelphia. if you add brooklyn which was then a separate municipality but, of course, they made a metro poll tan area, that was another quarter million people. d.c. at that point was, i think, 75,000 people. so it was tiny. so new york, it's this huge thing sitting up there. it's the center of banking and commerce. there were more banks in new york city than in the entire plantation south. it's center of merchandising. we don't think of new york as a factory town, but it was, in fact, the biggest factory town in the country. and not just then, for a long time afterwards. it had the biggest and busiest seaport, and it was the media center. the tribune and the herald were national pape beers, they went out all around the
new york city was huge. and at this point, we're talking about just manhattan and not even just manhattan, just the southern half of manhattan. from 42nd street up was pretty lonesome. in that space you had, in 1860, around 800,000 people. that was 200,000 more than the nearest big city of philadelphia. if you add brooklyn which was then a separate municipality but, of course, they made a metro poll tan area, that was another quarter million people. d.c. at that point was, i think, 75,000...
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7.0
Aug 14, 2021
08/21
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the new york city police office where the work? they work in transit you just were not well thought of we made the marine corps into a half years we got thenea nationally accredited and talk about having good relations with unions when we receive national accreditation in santa monica the union paid for the whole 60 person team to go to california for the award ceremony. can you imagine that? because they felt so proud of the idea they had become accredited now getting this reputation as the marine corps of the new york city police department. >> i had so much fun but with that big department so in new york and manhattan is where you make it in those take it if you're on the lawful side or the criminal side. so look att the new york city police department once again being advised by bob washington who is advising the transit police to put tension we on broadway with the new york city police department. as luck would have it and a couple years later it happened. host: talk about your first tour of duty in new york as commissioner. o
the new york city police office where the work? they work in transit you just were not well thought of we made the marine corps into a half years we got thenea nationally accredited and talk about having good relations with unions when we receive national accreditation in santa monica the union paid for the whole 60 person team to go to california for the award ceremony. can you imagine that? because they felt so proud of the idea they had become accredited now getting this reputation as the...
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Sep 13, 2015
09/15
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he heard stories about the glories of new york city. he had seen family members who had come to visit and they owned a trucking company, horse-drawn moving company. so he perhaps was 14 in leaving the south to head north to make his way, so he did at the age of 16. that eventually lead him to new york around the turn of the century. large, outgoing winning penalty was -- personality that he entered a thriving back culture at the time. he got to know the artists, sports figures. gave him a lifelessson, although you left school at the age of 13 with only eighth grade education, you'll never get anywhere until you start to read. and you have to read, and you have to read, and he did. eventually he could raised the rising fall of empire and believed that he was one of the greatest authors. there he was in new york on his own. he goes to work at grand central station. and from there, around 1909, he decides that he needed a better job, one with attention, one with steady pay and the police department offered that. he was about to get married
he heard stories about the glories of new york city. he had seen family members who had come to visit and they owned a trucking company, horse-drawn moving company. so he perhaps was 14 in leaving the south to head north to make his way, so he did at the age of 16. that eventually lead him to new york around the turn of the century. large, outgoing winning penalty was -- personality that he entered a thriving back culture at the time. he got to know the artists, sports figures. gave him a...
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1.0
Jul 7, 2021
07/21
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i knew about your new york city transit port. but i didn't know about the massachusetts transit work. but those are your two departments that are quite different from big-city policing is what i would call big-city policingtalk about some of the challenges , some of the issues that you had in dealing with that type of police department. >> both of those organizations you reference were known as the mta and an early version. you're old enough to come on the mta and never get off and back with the kingsley brothers i thinkback in the 60s . in boston, i visit a superintendent in chief, highest-ranking uniformed officer within 10 years thanks largely to the changes the graziano but i had probably two and the old guard were able to keep me in reedit some there were some innocent enough mistakes i t made . so that by 19 to 83, i've been bouncing back and had come back but was not satisfied because i was in a sense locked into a closet. then it was thrown to me, he was running the very scandal plagued the pa system, particularly its pol
i knew about your new york city transit port. but i didn't know about the massachusetts transit work. but those are your two departments that are quite different from big-city policing is what i would call big-city policingtalk about some of the challenges , some of the issues that you had in dealing with that type of police department. >> both of those organizations you reference were known as the mta and an early version. you're old enough to come on the mta and never get off and back...
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4.0
Jul 7, 2021
07/21
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city police department and itme happened. >> talk about your first in new york, new york city police commissioner, obviously you had a chance to serve as boston police commissioner select passcode for my firstle time in new york city, logical permit in the united states when you took it over 94 but i don't think it was upti to 40000. >> n95, merged three to five so we went up to 38000. after i left in 96, 99 with the caps off program, 100,000, 41000 for a while and back down around 33, 34000 once t again. >> unbelievable size of an organization like that, how do you manage something like that talk about the challenges managing something that large as a new york city police apartment. >> the toughest management job i hadut running a 20 police department. you were ata the go to person fr everything. i didn't have captains or majors, i had tenant and sgt. a counsel but it all came being district commander, nypd in some respects, people would laugh and sayel it was easier but it was, the talent pool of the organization, i had almost 1000 captains in the organization and 2650 mission. phe
city police department and itme happened. >> talk about your first in new york, new york city police commissioner, obviously you had a chance to serve as boston police commissioner select passcode for my firstle time in new york city, logical permit in the united states when you took it over 94 but i don't think it was upti to 40000. >> n95, merged three to five so we went up to 38000. after i left in 96, 99 with the caps off program, 100,000, 41000 for a while and back down around...
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29
May 6, 2014
05/14
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back in 1993, new york city had over 2200 murders. at that time, professor kelley met chief bratton at that time and then became police commissioner new york city. together they came up with implementing a lot of george is very thin combating crime. new york city police department has followed those procedures over the last 20 years. we went from 2200 murders last year in new york city had 340 murders. remarkable reduction in violent crime in new york and many, many people in new york city credit this man. ladies and gentlemen, let me present to you george killing. [applause] >> referring to broken windows, at first, at first it was five years ago. and it was 10 years ago. then it was a quarter century ago. and now it is 30 years. i'm still around and still talking about it. and it still remains somewhat of a controversial idea. i don't think the broken windows idea controversial if you understand the ideas. if you do not they can be controversial and i want to talk about that a little bit. broken window says he recognizes a metaphor.
back in 1993, new york city had over 2200 murders. at that time, professor kelley met chief bratton at that time and then became police commissioner new york city. together they came up with implementing a lot of george is very thin combating crime. new york city police department has followed those procedures over the last 20 years. we went from 2200 murders last year in new york city had 340 murders. remarkable reduction in violent crime in new york and many, many people in new york city...
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117
Oct 28, 2012
10/12
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felix, the new york city financier who helped new york city out of the desperate financial straights in the 1970s has a book out calling for a national infrastructure bank, and all three of them, and other people, too, cite the erie canal as the first major piece of infrastructure built in the country and the sort of thing we should be doing again, and it's interesting, to me, that these -- there's significant efforts to recreate or to create and to build and rebuild american infrastructure and that the erie canal is cited, but it almost seems as though a lot of this citation of the erie canal is somewhat blind. there aren't really very many similarities on how new york state built the eri canal and how the federal government now supports infrastructure projects. however, there is one very important similarity or how it could inform the debate how the federal government should be creating a national infrastructure bank to fund infrastructure prompts, and that is that it is essential for there to be a single person that owns the project, and with the er iring's e canal, i have not men
felix, the new york city financier who helped new york city out of the desperate financial straights in the 1970s has a book out calling for a national infrastructure bank, and all three of them, and other people, too, cite the erie canal as the first major piece of infrastructure built in the country and the sort of thing we should be doing again, and it's interesting, to me, that these -- there's significant efforts to recreate or to create and to build and rebuild american infrastructure and...
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178
Jun 23, 2012
06/12
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to the city of new york that we have this museum. i encourage you even if you have taken the tour before to take it again because there are new to wars and the floors are changing and it is a wonderful experience. as morris mentioned, to talk about my book jackie 18, i will show you some images, some of these are in the book and others are not in the book. the book itself really covers four centuries but starts with henry hudson bailing into the harbor in 1609 end initial encounters here. in 2001 and beyond. a narrow chronological focus of my presentation to really kind of make it go hand in hand with the period of 97 orchard street down the block which was built in 1863 by a german immigrant and occupied by successive generations of mostly immigrants. a slice of the store from the civil war through the 1930s and the onset of world war ii. the book does deal with a bunch of overlapping themes like economics and political and defense and the fortification. what i want to do in addition to narrowing the chronological focus is to focus
to the city of new york that we have this museum. i encourage you even if you have taken the tour before to take it again because there are new to wars and the floors are changing and it is a wonderful experience. as morris mentioned, to talk about my book jackie 18, i will show you some images, some of these are in the book and others are not in the book. the book itself really covers four centuries but starts with henry hudson bailing into the harbor in 1609 end initial encounters here. in...
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11
Feb 27, 2021
02/21
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new york city would be but an interim capitol. no one seemed happy with new york city. new york city was slow to ratify the constitution. this is why hamilton and jay and madison wrote the federalist papers that new york city would even ratify. washington was worried will i go to your city for my are now grown it's not even ratified as a state. that undermine everything can be the president if we don't have a city? and nobody seemed to like new york city unlike today where everybody likes near city. thomas jefferson claimed new york city in spring and fall they never have as far as i learned for them ten months of winter. only two of somerford they would agree right now as i'm taking this with the snow. ames and eric city long before the company of springfield. he described new york city is overrun by hogs, dogs, and garbage and not much else. no one liked new york city. they spent only months in new york city and then there is a deal cut. next slide. the deal will be cut in new york city on june 20, 1790. let's pry the second most famous dinner party in history i guess
new york city would be but an interim capitol. no one seemed happy with new york city. new york city was slow to ratify the constitution. this is why hamilton and jay and madison wrote the federalist papers that new york city would even ratify. washington was worried will i go to your city for my are now grown it's not even ratified as a state. that undermine everything can be the president if we don't have a city? and nobody seemed to like new york city unlike today where everybody likes near...
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0.0
Mar 14, 2024
03/24
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we have a little bit of context in new york city. we have 3 million housing units about a million of them are home ownership about 1 million are unregulated rental units in 1 million are regulated rental units. we have very heavy regulated and protects a lot of low income people. there is still a large amount that is unregulated. people are not generally looking at market rate luxury towers, they are looking at smaller three-10 related units or even basement apartments are owner occupied three unit buildings. there is a reals we talk about supply from the tenant advocacy side to increase the protections in new york citg and in new york state. i think for us that is part of the conversation. trying to make very clear that supply is our number one path to success and we need people to stay focused on that. not tenant protections and supply or we will just continue to be a crisis level in new york city. >> now we are getting to the lightning round of questions. audience questions are coming soon. get ready, folks. i will items on the ta
we have a little bit of context in new york city. we have 3 million housing units about a million of them are home ownership about 1 million are unregulated rental units in 1 million are regulated rental units. we have very heavy regulated and protects a lot of low income people. there is still a large amount that is unregulated. people are not generally looking at market rate luxury towers, they are looking at smaller three-10 related units or even basement apartments are owner occupied three...
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Oct 6, 2023
10/23
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york city could quote destroyed new york. in essence the light dimming on broadway. and now what we see is you have a letter that many of you have referenced. reference. a letter from governor kathy hopeful to president biden asking for the use of places, national parks, there is also been talk of using military bases to house these migrants. prior to becoming a member of congress i was proud to serve as a member of the greatest police department in the world the nypd. and i look back now on my brothers and sisters in a blue o called floyd bennett field essentially their office. aviation, some of scuba. members of special operations. different specialized units within the nypd who took an oath to protect and serve the constitution. it took an oath to stand that line between good and evil. not only do new york states and the democratic policies of this country look to the billy take the handcuffs off off police off of criminals and put it on police but now they were to cut the budget. now they have to share an office with migr
york city could quote destroyed new york. in essence the light dimming on broadway. and now what we see is you have a letter that many of you have referenced. reference. a letter from governor kathy hopeful to president biden asking for the use of places, national parks, there is also been talk of using military bases to house these migrants. prior to becoming a member of congress i was proud to serve as a member of the greatest police department in the world the nypd. and i look back now on my...
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Feb 15, 2015
02/15
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york city, and new york starts to transform the whole country, the style of music buildings, the works. thanks a lot. appreciate it. [applause] >> if anyone has any questions please feel free to come up to the front and speak clearly into the mic. >> i would like for you toll us about the publisher who signed up f. scott fitzgerald -- >> oh, yes horace. >> we don't know about. >> another -- the book has lot of facets to it, a lot of characters and all of mid-town is -- all of new york is moving uptown in the 1920s. the garment industry moves from the lower east side. up to 7th avenue and so does the publishing industry and the publishing industry needs to be near agents, magazines et cetera, talent. and a whole series of young publishers comes on the scene and challenge the old guard. most of the old publishers are jew rich, richmond simon, meets a guy named schuster. glad for those guys. bennett cerf, who founds random house. young, aggressive jewish publishers and livewrighters who name is not well known today, is the most tremendously exciting of all of them. he is a gambler like zi
york city, and new york starts to transform the whole country, the style of music buildings, the works. thanks a lot. appreciate it. [applause] >> if anyone has any questions please feel free to come up to the front and speak clearly into the mic. >> i would like for you toll us about the publisher who signed up f. scott fitzgerald -- >> oh, yes horace. >> we don't know about. >> another -- the book has lot of facets to it, a lot of characters and all of mid-town...
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6.0
May 28, 2021
05/21
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were talking one link people fled new york city in the '70s, 300,000 have already fled new york city and and o create an environment where people will stay, invest, continue to invest their properties so people have decent housing to live in and make sure the quality of life is improved by supporting our police and refunding our police. >> thank you mr. sliwa. that's all the time we have for this section. over to you. >> moderator: i've a question, talk about public health an issue of major importance as a come out of this pandemic which killed tens of thousands of our neighbors. the next mayor will inherit a city in which there's a possibility that a variance of covert or perhaps an entirely new disease could require the kind of shut down we saw last year. if a silver situation should arise many public health restrictions are once again called for how will you if you are the mayor handle the situation and how should the city enforce those rules? that start with you mr. sliwa. sliwa: number one we will never do what both de blasio and cuomo did to us and crush the life out of our cit
were talking one link people fled new york city in the '70s, 300,000 have already fled new york city and and o create an environment where people will stay, invest, continue to invest their properties so people have decent housing to live in and make sure the quality of life is improved by supporting our police and refunding our police. >> thank you mr. sliwa. that's all the time we have for this section. over to you. >> moderator: i've a question, talk about public health an issue...
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Jun 24, 2012
06/12
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kids in new york city playing by the dead horse. i don't know -- i don't know the actual street has been identified where the specifically was, but this, of course, is the other extreme of life in new york. by the 1870's you have a growing sense of to new york's which might come into collision, chilly in the streets of the city during the 1870's, starting in 1873 there is a bad recession , the recession of 87 victory last for several years and bring some of these class antagonisms to ahead. this is 1874 tompkins square park, allocation in this city which currently has been as site of controversy and confrontation between new yorkers. this was during the depression. various labor unions and working men's groups wanted the city to provide public works projects to fund public works projects of the people were not starving. and .. a misunderstanding they -- the police basically attack them, as you see in the background. you have all these liberal radicals, labor militants. i mean reformers in some cases basically fleeing for their lives
kids in new york city playing by the dead horse. i don't know -- i don't know the actual street has been identified where the specifically was, but this, of course, is the other extreme of life in new york. by the 1870's you have a growing sense of to new york's which might come into collision, chilly in the streets of the city during the 1870's, starting in 1873 there is a bad recession , the recession of 87 victory last for several years and bring some of these class antagonisms to ahead....
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Jun 3, 2016
06/16
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also, change the food served to new york city residents and consumers, so we pass these new york city standards that applies to all new york city agencies. it was done by executive order. it covers all meals served by the city and also covers vending machines and affects over 260 million meals and snacks each year, which is a lot of food. we were pleased with the downstream effects once a company reformulate its food in order to bid on new york city contracts. there may not be a reason for them to make them less healthy for other bidders, so it may have a downstream benefit to people who contract with the same companies. another example, new york city calorie labeling regulation, which as you know was adopted into the aca. we initiated in 2000 and amendment to the new york city of health code, so years before also and it requires certain food service establishments, these are chain restaurants to post calorie content information. it covers-- we have about 3000 restaurants in new york city that are chain restaurants. again, another really important opportunity for consumers to have tra
also, change the food served to new york city residents and consumers, so we pass these new york city standards that applies to all new york city agencies. it was done by executive order. it covers all meals served by the city and also covers vending machines and affects over 260 million meals and snacks each year, which is a lot of food. we were pleased with the downstream effects once a company reformulate its food in order to bid on new york city contracts. there may not be a reason for them...
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Dec 28, 2021
12/21
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i knew about your new york city transit work. i didid not know from big city policing are i would call big city. talk about some of the challenges how are they if they want to beat back with the kingsley brothers back in the 60s. in boston i visited the superintendent and chief the highest ranking uniformed office within ten t years. but i moved ahead probably too fast. they weree some innocent enough mistakes i made. had had become back. they were not satisfied i was in a sense locked into a closet this transit system served. after thinking about it, i took the risk. from a 2800 person to a 68 person department that was widely disrespected and thought to be totally ineffective. >> probably were the best decisionsob i've made in my life it gave me so much intimacy with getting into a small organization trusting my bill to turn the organization around model as the outsider coming in. learn so much i was assisted greatly by bob wasserman also with the boston police department. bob at that time wasng consultinghi it was chief of ope
i knew about your new york city transit work. i didid not know from big city policing are i would call big city. talk about some of the challenges how are they if they want to beat back with the kingsley brothers back in the 60s. in boston i visited the superintendent and chief the highest ranking uniformed office within ten t years. but i moved ahead probably too fast. they weree some innocent enough mistakes i made. had had become back. they were not satisfied i was in a sense locked into a...
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Nov 6, 2016
11/16
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the cotton south, plantation south and new york city grew up together. the explosive growth of the cotton plantations straight across the south was largely funded by new york banks because that's where the banks were so course you came here for your funding. the new york merchants supply the planners with everything from the pianos in their parlors to their file shares to the close they put on display. new york not only shifted the significance first of cotton but new york harbor was where those ships came back to fill european views and that made new york important to washington dc where or washington city as people called it back then. it had a big impact on the federal government because the government learned large portions of its revenues from the customs house in new york harbor, there was a b. where the entire federal budget was coming from the customs house in new york city. now wasn't just the bankers and shipping magnates who profited from cotton in new york city. the thousands and thousands of workers who directly or indirectly were profiting
the cotton south, plantation south and new york city grew up together. the explosive growth of the cotton plantations straight across the south was largely funded by new york banks because that's where the banks were so course you came here for your funding. the new york merchants supply the planners with everything from the pianos in their parlors to their file shares to the close they put on display. new york not only shifted the significance first of cotton but new york harbor was where...
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Nov 19, 2017
11/17
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york city school system and kids in the new york city school system purchased toilet paper and if so what happened at the school and what i discovered was that affluent district schools parents purchased the toilet paper and that poor schools kids went without and that seemed terrible and irresponsible and unacceptable. so, i kept having hearings on topics and i have to say even though i worked incredibly hard as a public servant it was really hard even with the power of subpoena to move this bureaucracy and it's not that there weren't good people and talented people who are trying on behalf of kids, but there was sort of finger-pointing, constantly trying to cover your tracks, lots of excuses and that and user, kids and family didn't get what they needed and deserved and even then i thought there's got to be away to fix this. it wasn't until much later that i got very very pessimistic about our chances of fundamentally 16-- fixing this very broken system. >> i'm wondering. you talk in the book about some charter school pioneers who you knew about. you knew about their work. were you
york city school system and kids in the new york city school system purchased toilet paper and if so what happened at the school and what i discovered was that affluent district schools parents purchased the toilet paper and that poor schools kids went without and that seemed terrible and irresponsible and unacceptable. so, i kept having hearings on topics and i have to say even though i worked incredibly hard as a public servant it was really hard even with the power of subpoena to move this...
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Sep 24, 2019
09/19
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york city in those neighborhoods in new york city. and so, this is a slide that shows what every public health practitioner wants to see. and that is a measures that we put in place had the desired outcome and the measures we put in place for intended to increase the number of individuals that were vaccinated. so, this is a slide that looks at the previous year and what we see is typically we have a back-to-school rush. the dark line is the 2018, 2019 period and the dotted line is the year before. whawhat baseball is at the beginning of the outbreak, when we declared it, we saw a significant spike in the number of individuals who received the mmr vaccine. and then over time, it dropped. we started issuing exclusion letters and walking more aggressively. we saw the spike their independent we have a low and when we issued a public health emergency, we saw another spike in the number of individuals who were immunized. what you see here is august and september the number of individuals in this school year getting immunized in the back-to-
york city in those neighborhoods in new york city. and so, this is a slide that shows what every public health practitioner wants to see. and that is a measures that we put in place had the desired outcome and the measures we put in place for intended to increase the number of individuals that were vaccinated. so, this is a slide that looks at the previous year and what we see is typically we have a back-to-school rush. the dark line is the 2018, 2019 period and the dotted line is the year...
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Dec 7, 2019
12/19
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new york city and new york state actually gave them everything they had asked for before this argument. that was married very plain in this argument today. the case is moot it is a case that should not have gone forward to this point but in any event we are looking forward to the judgment of the court. we feel we had a very strong and powerful presence in the hearing today. we are grateful for not only riches work but that of the entire appeals unit in the law department and the support of jeff fisher and his team and we are fortunate today that the solicitor general of the state of new york also traveled down with us to be present at the argument. >> can ask a question? one of the things mr. dearing said was that the fact that the state of new york changed its law and that the city changed its regulations was not maneuvering as the other side. what he mean by that? >> it's a good judgment i think it was justice breyer that noted that when there are parties to an argument when there are parties Ãbwhen there are parties to an argument and those parties resolve or settle disputes before
new york city and new york state actually gave them everything they had asked for before this argument. that was married very plain in this argument today. the case is moot it is a case that should not have gone forward to this point but in any event we are looking forward to the judgment of the court. we feel we had a very strong and powerful presence in the hearing today. we are grateful for not only riches work but that of the entire appeals unit in the law department and the support of jeff...
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Aug 17, 2021
08/21
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new york city would be but an interim capital. no one seemed happy with new york city. new york city was slow to ratify the constitution. this is why hamilton and jay and madison wrote the federalist papers. they did know if newark city would ratify. washington was wait while ago to new york city for my inaugural? with that undermined everything? couldn't even do the president if we we don't have a city? nobody it seemed like new york city unlike today where everybody likes new york city, thomas jefferson claim new york city in spring and fall they never have as far as i can learn. that ten months of winter, only two of summer. they would agree right now with the snow and the culture fisher ames said of new york city he longed for the company of springfield or he described new york city as overrun by hogs, dogs and garbage, and not much else. so no one like new york city. they spent only months in new york city and then there was a deal cut. next light. the deal would be cut in new york city on june 20, 1790. what is probably the second most famous dinner party in histo
new york city would be but an interim capital. no one seemed happy with new york city. new york city was slow to ratify the constitution. this is why hamilton and jay and madison wrote the federalist papers. they did know if newark city would ratify. washington was wait while ago to new york city for my inaugural? with that undermined everything? couldn't even do the president if we we don't have a city? nobody it seemed like new york city unlike today where everybody likes new york city,...
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Jun 15, 2009
06/09
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the new york city finance your who helped new york city out of its desperate financial straits in the 1970's as as a book out calling for a national infrastructure bank. and all three of them and other people, too, cited the eery canal as the first major piece of infrastructure that was built in the country and the sort of thing that we should be doing again. and it is interesting to me that there are significant efforts to recreate -- to create and to build and rebuild america's infrastructure and that the erie canal is cited. but it almost seems as though a lot of the citation of the erie canal is somewhat blind. there aren't really very many similarities between how new york city and new york state built the erie canal and of the federal government now might support infrastructure projects. however, there is one very important similarities -- one way in which the erie canal, i think, has helped inform the debate about whether the federal government should be creating a national infrastructure bank tough on infrastructure projects. and that is that it is essential for there to be a
the new york city finance your who helped new york city out of its desperate financial straits in the 1970's as as a book out calling for a national infrastructure bank. and all three of them and other people, too, cited the eery canal as the first major piece of infrastructure that was built in the country and the sort of thing that we should be doing again. and it is interesting to me that there are significant efforts to recreate -- to create and to build and rebuild america's infrastructure...
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Jun 4, 2020
06/20
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i've sent new york state police to cities to deal with these protests. they have to have the right numbers. they have to be empowered to do their job. and we've had protests again last night all across the state. i want to applaud the local police, who have done a great job. i want to applaud the state police, who have done a great job. the protests were mainly peaceful all across the state, and i want to thank all involved for keeping it that way, protesters included. new york city last night was much better. the protesters were mainly peaceful. the police officers have the resources and the capacity to do their jobs. and the results last night were much, much different than the night before. and that's what it's all about. and i think the people in new york city should feel much better today than they did after the night of looting. these are perilous times. there's a lot going on, and we have to understand what's going on and the difference among the issues that we're dealing with. you have the covid crisis. you have the murder of mr. floyd, two very
i've sent new york state police to cities to deal with these protests. they have to have the right numbers. they have to be empowered to do their job. and we've had protests again last night all across the state. i want to applaud the local police, who have done a great job. i want to applaud the state police, who have done a great job. the protests were mainly peaceful all across the state, and i want to thank all involved for keeping it that way, protesters included. new york city last night...
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15
Aug 18, 2021
08/21
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washington is inaugurated in new york city late april 1789, new york city and where young washington used his residence, new york city would be an interim capitol. no one seemed happy with new york city, so to ratify the constitution and this is why hamilton and james madison wrote the federalist papers and if new york city would even ratify it. was worried, but i got to new york city, it's not even ratify it as a state. but i even be the president if we don't have a city? it seemed like nobody unlike today where everybody likes new york city. thomas jefferson claimed new york city set spring and fall may never have as far as i can learn, we have ten months of winter, only two of summer. i set up new york city for the company of springfield describing new york city as overrun by hogs and garbage and not much else. they spent on the months in new york city and then there was a deal. the deal would be cut in new york city june 20, 1790 and was probably the second most famous dinner party and history, i guess behind the last supper. the dinner party was between, and you can see the pict
washington is inaugurated in new york city late april 1789, new york city and where young washington used his residence, new york city would be an interim capitol. no one seemed happy with new york city, so to ratify the constitution and this is why hamilton and james madison wrote the federalist papers and if new york city would even ratify it. was worried, but i got to new york city, it's not even ratify it as a state. but i even be the president if we don't have a city? it seemed like nobody...
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89
Dec 1, 2013
12/13
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the british took new york in the summer of 17 # -- 1776, and what is the importance of new york city in the strategic shape of the war? why is that important? >> guest: this is educational to me and which i find when people write me now, do i give this to the 15-year-old or 14-year-old? i live, i grew up in long island. i love history. i love social studies, and i thought to myself, okay, is this on the test? we moved on. if you look at the 13 colonies and look at new york and their ports and location, it's the center of what would be the new country. it's where the traffic was, the commerce was, and it's where shifts pull in and big ships pulled out. people knew new york. there was another area, and you could have cattle and feed an army like the british army. if the colonists were to be a country, they can't with britain there and as long as they don't have control of the ports and area. >> now, washington's first idea for spy is nathan heal; right? tell us that story. >> caller: nathan hale missed bunker hill. he wanted to see the action, and i know you know this inside and out, a
the british took new york in the summer of 17 # -- 1776, and what is the importance of new york city in the strategic shape of the war? why is that important? >> guest: this is educational to me and which i find when people write me now, do i give this to the 15-year-old or 14-year-old? i live, i grew up in long island. i love history. i love social studies, and i thought to myself, okay, is this on the test? we moved on. if you look at the 13 colonies and look at new york and their ports...
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41
Nov 25, 2019
11/19
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but overall, it was really good mayor who new york city. he brought the city out of to relate recessions and one was after 911 and one was the great recession in 2007. he stopped people from smoking and note new york city. nobody believed that could happen. i became contagious around the world. they started 311. he added 700 acres of park. he launched a building boom in the city that is still going on. it changed 40 percent of the, he did a lot of things that were really made the city better. now, no problems who him, in the name of gun control, he caused who much pain and suffering the black and hispanic communities of the city. >> but some would also argue that the crime rates dropped during that as well. the rising backup. >> who yes, the crime rate did go down for the reasons i didn't say we could see him apologize until now, was that he kept thinking that if the next administration didn't continue the crime would go up but it did. the new administration scale back and as crime continued to stay low in the city made. >> area code. inter
but overall, it was really good mayor who new york city. he brought the city out of to relate recessions and one was after 911 and one was the great recession in 2007. he stopped people from smoking and note new york city. nobody believed that could happen. i became contagious around the world. they started 311. he added 700 acres of park. he launched a building boom in the city that is still going on. it changed 40 percent of the, he did a lot of things that were really made the city better....
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155
Nov 6, 2011
11/11
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[laughter] but, communism and civil rights and the new york city's teachers union. but one of the major battles in new york city was over which direction teachers union that someone's going to take and this erupted in the 1930s. the type of unionism that i describe here emphasized by the new york city teachers union, social unionism, did have the sort of rotter definition fighting along with parents, fighting along with the civic leaders to democratize education. now, the union that unfortunately dominates, that one in the end an had a different version of unionism and a different type of unionism was militant clearly on the behalf of teachers. militants in the sense of giving them better wages, better working conditions, but it didn't lay those roots. it didn't extend it to dealing with concerns of parents, the concerns of students, with the concerns of the larger community. on certain issues it did but it clearly was not part of its broader take. and unfortunately, that union ran into a lot of trouble with the black and latino communities by the 1950s and of cours
[laughter] but, communism and civil rights and the new york city's teachers union. but one of the major battles in new york city was over which direction teachers union that someone's going to take and this erupted in the 1930s. the type of unionism that i describe here emphasized by the new york city teachers union, social unionism, did have the sort of rotter definition fighting along with parents, fighting along with the civic leaders to democratize education. now, the union that...
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157
Nov 5, 2011
11/11
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and the new york city police department. the fear of communism helped to determine what children learned, the decision traditionally left to educators. police and those invoking the need for national security had a strong voice in deciding what was educationally appropriate for students. teachers exercise independent judgment, they risked their career. even the subject of lynching and racism could be eliminated from the teachers lesson plan because it was seen as appointing communist propaganda. academic freedom became support at to the concerns of the security states. i'm afraid to some degree we are facing this situation today. thank you. [applause] >> thank you, clarence. bill adler will talk about his book. >> hello. can you hear me? can you hear me in the back? good. well, first i want to thank the brooklyn book festival for actually putting this festival together, because it isn't often that people who write about labor history and issues get this sort of an audience, so thank you, nonfiction committee members. the aud
and the new york city police department. the fear of communism helped to determine what children learned, the decision traditionally left to educators. police and those invoking the need for national security had a strong voice in deciding what was educationally appropriate for students. teachers exercise independent judgment, they risked their career. even the subject of lynching and racism could be eliminated from the teachers lesson plan because it was seen as appointing communist...
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6.0
Aug 13, 2021
08/21
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eye 6
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in new york city, 456 stations in new york city pretty and there's 45000 trains running with 4000 buses and almost 6 million riders before the epidemic. and this experience was probably mike's most satisfying that transit in new york was separate from the city police, with 25000 it and now 4000 but they were the dumping ground in the sense, all the police. you see the new york city police officer they would take him a really warty work. by working transit. while they just would not well thought of. we made them the marine corps into half years, as we dealt with a great team working with the union and when i talk about having good relations with unions, when we received national predication, the union pay the whole 60 person team, took over california. imagine that. because i felt so proud of the idea that they had been, accredited and are now getting this reputation in new york as a marine corps new york city police department. so it's so much fun in transit but also allowed me that they department in boston as the headquarters of brooklyn resort new york, comparing it to the city, manh
in new york city, 456 stations in new york city pretty and there's 45000 trains running with 4000 buses and almost 6 million riders before the epidemic. and this experience was probably mike's most satisfying that transit in new york was separate from the city police, with 25000 it and now 4000 but they were the dumping ground in the sense, all the police. you see the new york city police officer they would take him a really warty work. by working transit. while they just would not well thought...
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24
Nov 6, 2021
11/21
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eye 24
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it's caroled to over into the new world and carried over violently where in new york city new york city, orangemen would march through irish catholic sections of the city kind of rubbing their face in it, and riots ensued. that's an example of how old world resentments carried over, but tweed is representative of the possibilities of american life. most of his followers in politics were, in fact, eye -- irish catholics. tweed realized that he was in this cosmopolitan city, many different ethnic groups. ethnic groups also could vote, and you don't get votes by alienating people or dragging up old battles. so he was, tweed -- though by native anglo perspective was a little more american by virtue of being presbyterian -- nonetheless, kind of opened up to the catholic community, especially the irish catholic community. and we see this in his inner circle, the so-called tweed ring that is associated, again, with this, with this corruption. the next image i have sent out to you is of that of the tweed ring. you see a ring of people all accusing the other person of corruption. but there are f
it's caroled to over into the new world and carried over violently where in new york city new york city, orangemen would march through irish catholic sections of the city kind of rubbing their face in it, and riots ensued. that's an example of how old world resentments carried over, but tweed is representative of the possibilities of american life. most of his followers in politics were, in fact, eye -- irish catholics. tweed realized that he was in this cosmopolitan city, many different ethnic...
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54
Jan 19, 2019
01/19
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city and new york state. i think it's fair to new york city and to long island and buffalo and westchester i don't think anyone across the state has a problem keeping that system running helps the entire state. it has worked with new york city to make the investment we should have made for decades to keep that transportation system vital and more than anything we have to do it this year. because the status quo has got to go. the writers are fed up. the situation only gets worse you can pay me now or pay me later. the system is just continuing to deteriorate and if we don't invest now we will pay more later and suffer in the meantime so let's address the mta. let's do it this year. [applause] we also have to make progress across the state to keep building the economy $70 billion of the first term 100 billion in the second we would be leading the nation of all the states actually build a new transportation system of infrastructure the economy comes with the state with infrastructure and that's why it's coming t
city and new york state. i think it's fair to new york city and to long island and buffalo and westchester i don't think anyone across the state has a problem keeping that system running helps the entire state. it has worked with new york city to make the investment we should have made for decades to keep that transportation system vital and more than anything we have to do it this year. because the status quo has got to go. the writers are fed up. the situation only gets worse you can pay me...
39
39
Feb 4, 2022
02/22
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york city, they are not made in new york city, they not sold in new york city, they are sold in other places. today the attorney general directed all u.s. attorneys in the united states to prioritize combating gun trafficking across the state lines the city boundaries and the justice department is sending additional resources to shut down when they refer to as the iron pipeline like states like baltimore and philadelphia and new york and so many other places in the governor, we work with the mayor nypd, and nine other states creating your task force on illegal guns and that is a kind of leadership that is going to solve the problems. it will hear more about that project and i also want to help every major city following new york's lead, put together partnerships like this one to put together, and building in everyday here in new york city, federal, state and local enforcement, share intelligence about shootings from the day before, the work to take those herself the street as quickly as possible. visit with the partnership looks like and this is what you put together. it's important w
york city, they are not made in new york city, they not sold in new york city, they are sold in other places. today the attorney general directed all u.s. attorneys in the united states to prioritize combating gun trafficking across the state lines the city boundaries and the justice department is sending additional resources to shut down when they refer to as the iron pipeline like states like baltimore and philadelphia and new york and so many other places in the governor, we work with the...
0
0.0
Apr 25, 2024
04/24
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the chicago tribune once called him the blue jeans of new york city. he could get dirty with the laborers, as many of his peers couldn't. at the opening of the new york metropolitan museum of art, he chose to sit with the common citizens rather than the dignitaries. to tale of a garden and the three sams. after tilden lost the election. in 1877, he attempted to enjoy life. he bought huge yachts and turned his prize for st bernard's and dog shows and won. in 1879, he bought gray's an estate in yonkers on the hudson river. its chords as you see the palisade cliffs just beautiful property which he would expand to 200 acres. the mansion 99 rooms and it's here. he had a stroke and died. many later in, 1899. samuel onto meyer bought the vast estate on the hudson. his vision was to turn it into phoenician gardens, the grandest in the world. temples pillars, fountains, some prices were built rivaling all others. over time, much of the was sold off. never less. one can envision the beauty visiting unfamiliar gardens. i visited it a few years ago and these photo
the chicago tribune once called him the blue jeans of new york city. he could get dirty with the laborers, as many of his peers couldn't. at the opening of the new york metropolitan museum of art, he chose to sit with the common citizens rather than the dignitaries. to tale of a garden and the three sams. after tilden lost the election. in 1877, he attempted to enjoy life. he bought huge yachts and turned his prize for st bernard's and dog shows and won. in 1879, he bought gray's an estate in...
12
12
Aug 14, 2018
08/18
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when they moved back to new york city. he ended up going to his regular doctor who knew there was a serious problem as soon as they looked at his throat and they sent him to a throat specialist, doctor john douglas. he went to doctor douglas's office and he took a look at his throat and grant look at his face and said his cancer and unfortunately the doctor had to tell him essentially it was cancer. grant worked on his memoir throughout the winter of 84, 85 and towards the spring of 85 it was touch and go. he had a couple of near-death experiences and his doctors believe the only way he would survive long enough to finish this book is to get him out of the city but was humid and dusty and hot to a mountaintop environment. they were looking for opportunities and a friend of the family approached the doctors and family to offer the use of the cottage they just purchased on the top of mount mcgregor at top of sera t sarah saratoga springs. the cottage that they offered was fairly modest in size but did have six rooms upstairs
when they moved back to new york city. he ended up going to his regular doctor who knew there was a serious problem as soon as they looked at his throat and they sent him to a throat specialist, doctor john douglas. he went to doctor douglas's office and he took a look at his throat and grant look at his face and said his cancer and unfortunately the doctor had to tell him essentially it was cancer. grant worked on his memoir throughout the winter of 84, 85 and towards the spring of 85 it was...
87
87
Dec 24, 2013
12/13
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and what is the importance of new york city in the strategic shape of the war? why is that so important? >> guest: its educational for me and i find when people write me now they say should i give this to my 15-years-old, to my 14-year-old? fi lived and grew up on that island. and i love history and social studies. and i was thinking to myself okay. is this going to be on the test. if you look at the 13 colonies and the ports and its location it's the center of what would be the new country. it's where most of the traffic was, much of the commerce, where the big ships could pull in and the big ships could pullout and people knew of majorca and have this other area called long island where you could grow food and you could have cattle and you could actually feed an army like the british army. so, if the colony's planned on becoming a country, they can't do it as long as britain is there. they can't do it as long as they don't have control of the ports and the area. >> host: washington's first idea for a spike is nathan hale, right? tell us that story. >> guest: n
and what is the importance of new york city in the strategic shape of the war? why is that so important? >> guest: its educational for me and i find when people write me now they say should i give this to my 15-years-old, to my 14-year-old? fi lived and grew up on that island. and i love history and social studies. and i was thinking to myself okay. is this going to be on the test. if you look at the 13 colonies and the ports and its location it's the center of what would be the new...
40
40
Mar 29, 2015
03/15
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of course it is new york city. during the revolution, new york was occupied by the british. the british offered freedom to any slaves of the petrie at who got to their lives in several thousand waves got to new york city. when the war was over george washington came out to negotiate the evacuation of new york. would like all the slaves back in general clinton the british commander said unfortunately i can't give you the slaves back because it would be dishonorable. we promise these people and they would be dishonorable to turn them back into slavery. clinton was on abolitionists. slavery in the west indies. he wasn't trying to abolish slavery they said the king keeps his promises. somewhere about 3000 slaves left with the british, including a couple of george washington's own slaves. by the way, keep an eye out for a couple of my slaves. now they scattered all over the place. some ended up in canada, some britain, some in sierra leone. some of them were sold back into slavery by the british and ended up in the west indies. they have their own very interesting stories. the 30
of course it is new york city. during the revolution, new york was occupied by the british. the british offered freedom to any slaves of the petrie at who got to their lives in several thousand waves got to new york city. when the war was over george washington came out to negotiate the evacuation of new york. would like all the slaves back in general clinton the british commander said unfortunately i can't give you the slaves back because it would be dishonorable. we promise these people and...